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Thursday, 10 March 2011

Getting Started With a PhotoShop - Enjoy unlimited creative options

Enjoy unlimited creative options


    With innovative special-effect options and powerful painting and drawing tools, there's no limit to the results you can achieve with Photoshop.
    Painting tools
    The powerful Photoshop paint engine lets you simulate traditional painting techniques, including charcoal, pastel, and wet or dry brush effects. Choose from the many preset brush styles on the Photoshop CD, or use the Brushes palette to create your own unique effects.
    Drawing tools
    Draw resolution-independent vector shapes instantly with the line, rectangle, ellipse, polygon, and custom shape tools. Or use the pen tool to draw just as you would in Adobe Illustrator. Because they're vector shapes, you can edit them easily.
    Layer effects
    Shadows, glows, bevels, embossed effects, and more--with the Layer Styles dialog box, adding three-dimensional effects to a layer is quick and easy. You can apply any combination of layer effects, then save the combination as a style and apply it to other layers instantly. To edit or delete the effect, simply open the Layer Styles dialog box and change the settings.
    Color effects
    Choose solid colors from swatch libraries, define your own colors in Color palette, or use the gradient tools to create a gradual blend between multiple colors. Use the Layers palette to change the opacity of an image or to apply a blending mode that affects the way the color in one layer interacts with the layers below.
    Filters
    Photoshop includes more than 95 special effect filters--from fine-art effects, to motion blurs, to lighting effects and distortions.
    Pattern Maker
    Create seamless patterns automatically. Simply make a selection and apply the Pattern Maker plug-in to generate textures and background patterns.
    Transformation tools
    Scale, rotate, distort, or skew images easily. Apply the 3D Transform filter to simulate three-dimensional effects such as jar labels and boxes. Use the Liquify command to interactively push, pull, pucker, or bloat an image.

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Add and Subtract blending modes (1) Adobe Bridge (1) Applying transformations (1) Artistic (1) blending effects (1) Blur (1) Brush Stroke (1) change the color of frozen areas (1) Choosing preset page views (1) Creating New Images (1) Creating temporary masks in Quick Mask mode (1) delete (1) delete a wire frame (1) Digimarkmarc filters (1) distort (2) Duplicating layers (1) Editing Menus (1) Filters - Choosing effect (1) Filters - Defining undistorted areas (1) flip or rotate (1) Freezing and thawing areas (1) Guidelines for using the History Palette (1) Improving performance (1) Loading a selection into an image (1) Loading images and textures (1) Making Color adjustment (1) Making Sticky Note (1) manipulate the object in three dimension (1) masks (1) Noise (3) or apply perspective (1) or hide a color sample (1) Pagemaker Tutorial - Basic (1) Pixelate (1) reconstruct areas to match distortions (1) Reconstructing distortions (1) Render (1) Replace Color Command (1) rotate (2) Save Changes in the Current File (1) Saving a mask selection (1) Saving Image Files (1) scale (1) Seeing the color values of pixels (1) Sharpen (1) show or hide frozen areas (1) Sketch (1) Stylize (1) Texture (1) the eyedropper or color sampler tool (1) Tips for creating special effects (1) To apply multiple types of transformations (1) To change the Quick Mask options (1) To load a saved selection using shortcuts (1) To repeat a transformation (1) To use the eyedropper tool and Color palette (1) Transforming and manipulating objects (1) use the Info palette (1) Using History Palette (1) Using texture and glass surface controls (1) using the Apply Image command (1) Using the Calculations command (1) Using the Liquify command (1) Using the Liquify dialog box (1) Viewing Pages (1) Working with Palettes (1)